Hawaii's Police, Lawmakers Reach Consensus On Prostitution Law : The Two-WayState law makes it legal in some cases for undercover cops to have sex with prostitutes. At first, police officials expressed concern about eliminating that exemption. Now they're OK with a change.

Hawaii's Police, Lawmakers Reach Consensus On Prostitution Law

Honolulu police officials and key legislators in Hawaii now agree that a state law needs to be changed so that undercover police officers will be breaking the law if they have sexual relations with prostitutes.

Those lawmakers appear to have been surprised to learn that a decades-old provision in the state's criminal code exempted law enforcement agents from prosecution if they had sex with prostitutes while "acting in the course and scope of duties."

The Honolulu Police Department "agrees that the sexual penetration language in the law that they are exempt from should no longer be an exemption for police officers," State Sen. Clayton Hee, a Democrat, told the station. Hee chairs the state Senate's Judiciary and Labor Committee.

According to KHON, Honolulu Police Maj. Jerry Inouye "says HPD has never allowed police officers to have sex with prostitutes and that HPD only wanted to keep 'the part that allows an officer to make a verbal agreement for sex for money because that's the crux for most prostitution investigations.' "